Mites

For resistance management purposes, any insect population may contain individuals naturally resistant to insecticide . If these insecticides are used repeatedly, the resistant individuals may eventually dominate the pest insect population. These resistant insects may not be controlled by that insecticides or other insecticides in same IRAC MoA group. To delay the development of resistance:
• Avoid exclusive repeated use of insecticides from the same chemical sub-group, (indicated by the IRAC MoA Group number).

• Alternate with products from other IRAC MoA Groups

• Integrate other control methods (chemical, cultural, biological) into insect control programs.

3 groups in the classification are exceptions in that they do not contain compounds acting at a common target site and are therefore exempt from the proscription against rotation of compounds within a group.

These are …
1. Group 8, Miscellaneous non-specific (multi-site) inhibitors;
2. Group 13, Uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation via disruption of the proton
gradient;
3. Group UN, Compounds of unknown or uncertain MoA, for instance…Azadirachtin, Dicofol, Pyridalyl.

Groups under Growth and Development …
Insect development is controlled by the balance of two principal hormones: juvenile hormone and ecdysone. Insect growth regulators act by mimicking one of these hormones or directly perturbing cuticle formation/deposition or lipid biosynthesis. Insecticides that act on individual targets in this system are generally slow to moderately slow acting.

Group 7 Juvenile hormone mimics Applied in the pre-metamorphic instar, these compounds disrupt and prevent metamorphosis.